Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Husband prioritises sick mother over me and baby

166 replies

Disgruntledwife2023 · 12/01/2023 17:16

There is a fair bit of backstory here... My husband and I have been together over 10 years and married for just over 6. His mother was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer in spring 2016. I was there for all the tests, the hospital stay, was driving across the city every day after work for over a week to the hospital to be there to support them etc. We then got married very quickly (within 6 months) because we didn't think she would have long. I planned the whole wedding by myself as well as moving house to live with husband during that period, and getting a puppy together. We never had a honeymoon and instead went away with his parents for 2 weeks. On our first wedding anniversary, my husband went on holiday with his mum, also missing my birthday (without discussing this with me at all).
I spent 6 years commuting over 1 hour and then this became 1.5 hours each way so that we could live 5/10 mins drive from his parents. We have been away on holiday with his parents nearly as many times as we have been away together as a married couple.
I finally had a bit of a breakdown with the commuting and we decided to move to be closer to my work (I am a teacher) and I also moved to work part time for my mental health. Within a month his parents moved 10 mins drive from us and spent a week living with us before they could move in.
Throughout the Covid pandemic, my husband was constantly on edge that I as a teacher would catch Covid and infect him and he would then infect his mum. I was so super careful about this and really anxious to avoid this happening but nevertheless he would ask me on a regular basis about had I had contact with positive people, if I was going out somewhere reminding me all the time about masks and hand sanitiser etc. In the end, it was his dad who caught Covid when I was 8 months pregnant. I then said yes to his mum coming to live with us even though she had therefore been exposed. My husband basically moved into the spare room with her as she needs assistance walking and going to the bathroom. It turned out she had caught Covid from his dad and then my husband also got it. She had a bad reaction and had to go into hospital for a few days, and when she left for hospital, it turned out she had wet herself and vomited all over the spare room bed. I carried the mattress out to the garden and spent hours scrubbing at it - at 8 months pregnant. My husband barely thanked me.
More backstory - his dad shows 0 interest in me at all, still doesn't know what I do for a job (I am a languages teacher - it's not that hard to remember...) and creates lots of conflict with my husband every holiday we go on together. Once he took off at 3am and left his wife (who was very ill at that point having deteriorated) with us for us to sort out getting her home in our car.

I thought now that we have a baby together that we would become his priority. I ended up having a traumatic birth and a emergency c section delivery. On the day this happened, he was pushing for his parents to come to the hospital. Fortunately the visiting hours didn't work out! The following day when we came home, he had his parents come over and his dad made comments about me looking fat and asked how long it would take for me to look normal again. At first, my husband was sympathetic to me being upset at this, but then told me I am overly sensitive and I should now his dad by now doesn't mean bad by those comments. I needed a lot of care for the first couple of weeks as I couldn't drive, couldn't stand up or sit down or get out of bed by myself. Still, my husband didn't do any housework and only offered to cook for me once. As soon as I was more able he was back to having his parents over all the time or going round to theirs, and commented that he feels bad for spending the time at home with me rather than looking after his mum.
I ended up feeling extremely depressed, even suicidal, and highly anxious in the first couple of months. I felt like I had no support and wasn't a priority. I voiced all this but was essentially told it can't be any other way. My husband works 3 days a week and before Christmas all of these were from home. He was still seeing his parents three times a week on average and making time for bike rides, gym sessions, and online language lessons, plus developing an app he is working on. Meanwhile I was still doing all the housework, arranging everything for our baby like health checks and a passport for her so we could go on holiday with his parents at Christmas, and cooking for all of us.

During the first 6 weeks he also tried to get me to let him take our baby daughter to his parents place without me. She is breastfed. He tried to get me to agree to using formula so he wouldn't need me to be there. I was distraught at this and couldn't bear the idea. He finally relented but then would raise the subject a couple of days later again and this went on and on until he realised I just couldn't agree to this and so his parents would come round ours every other day.

The holiday at Christmas fell through because his dad hadn't been organised enough to arrange more medication for his mum before going and I lost hundreds of pounds I had spent on flights there and back. I had also spent so much mental energy getting myself feeling robust enough to fly with a 2.5 month old whilst still managing my depression and anxiety.

My husband also blocked my parents coming to stay with us in October, a month after our daughter was born and on my birthday, saying he would feel it was an intrusion on his space. This was after they had had a row in the summer when they came to stay with us (I was 6 months pregnant) and my husband spent the whole time up in his office playing computer games.

Finally I persuaded my husband to let my parents stay at the end of December and it made a world of difference to me to have my mum around cooking dinner and just knowing she and my dad were there for me and I could rely on them. Finally I no longer felt depressed and my self esteem was getting better.

In the meantime I have flagged up to my husband on multiple occasions that I'm not happy with the state of our marriage. I have voiced that I feel like I'm not a priority and things need to change. He has finally agreed to do more housework, he now empties the dishwasher, hoovers and wipes the kitchen surfaces once a week (I do these all the other days a week...). And he walks the dog when he is around - but in reality he is now going into the office one day a week and helping out at his parents on the other days.

He has again now raised the issue of taking our daughter to spend time with his parents without me and that I am not meeting his emotional needs by not being okay with this. I said actually I would probably be fine with it if he can let me know the day before so I can pump milk for him to take. Apparently that's not good enough and he wants to be able to go at a moment's notice and doesn't care about her having a nap schedule etc.
He hasn't been helping out at all with nappy changing, bath time, bedtime, coming to any baby classes or appointments on the days he isn't working. He has only just started playing and reading to her at my suggestion. He said he wasn't doing any of that stuff because it was too painful for him to accept I can't let him take her without me spontaneously to his parents.

For context- his mum's cancer hasn't got any worse in 6 years, but she now can't walk unassisted and struggles with speech. She needs help with basic tasks like bathing, bathroom, eating, and getting dressed - largely from the radiation therapy that she was treated with. His dad is only just pursuing getting some help with carers.

I'm at breaking point in our marriage. I have started to contact mediators and solicitors for separation to understand how this would work. I know I've partly engineered the situation by allowing myself to be on the back burner our whole marriage, but I thought him becoming a father would change things and it hasn't. I don't want our daughter to grow up seeing me not being prioritised and think therefore that it's okay for her to not be number one for her future partner.

If you're still reading - well done! I'm sorry it's so long, but it has been years of this and I feel like the examples are relevant.

Am I being unreasonable? I am so scared about starting a separation / divorce process, but I feel like I need to think about our daughter and what we model for her in a marriage.

OP posts:
Yesthatismychildsigh · 12/01/2023 18:14

Why are you even with him?

Nowthenhere · 12/01/2023 18:14

Find out what rights your baby has to access her father with regards to separation/breastfed/age.

Start there and find what conditions that's under. Example:

If you and baby leave the family home to move else where, do you have to finance and do all travelling to original town.

How many hours does your breastfed baby minimum need contact for with father per week.

When does that need to increase to more hours and overnight, when she's weaned? When she's aged 4 and attending school?

If your husband moves in with his parents, how does facilitating visits change? As they are the home owners, would they have the right to refuse access to their property to you and not their granddaughter meaning that contact with dad would be without supervision?

How much notice does each party need for access.

This will help with getting your ducks in a row/deciding when your child is emotionally mature enough for the above for when you leave.

Please leave.
When it's safest for your child to do so.

amiold · 12/01/2023 18:16

🚩 🚩

This is unhealthy!

He's a nob. His dads a nob. His poor mum needs help.. off her husband. Not her adult son sleeping in the spare room with her. Weird.

He doesn't give a toss about you. He's using you cos it suits at the minute. Will probably leave after his mums day.

Leave him. Don't look back.

MajorCarolDanvers · 12/01/2023 18:16

Not normal.

You are doing the right thing OP

Icepinkeskimo · 12/01/2023 18:22

Aria2015 · 12/01/2023 18:00

Your parents sound loving and supportive. Lean on them now and let them help you through a separation. Your husband can move in with his parents and play computer games to his hearts content and you can focus on your baby and moving on from your useless husband.

This is absolutely spot on advice.

Fraaahnces · 12/01/2023 18:27

You need a solicitor asap. He is an arse.

StewPots · 12/01/2023 18:30

YANBU. He sounds utterly awful OP. Good for you getting legal advice.

TheMagicSword · 12/01/2023 18:39

This is absolutely not normal. The issue is not that his mother is sick, the issue is that he has a very unhealthy codependent relationship with his parents, and he takes you for granted. I very much doubt things would have been much different if his mum wasn’t sick.

I was glad to read that you’re looking at leaving! Good, you are better off without him. Your parents sound very supportive, lean on them when you need to. Perhaps go to their house for an extended visit (assuming you’re still on mat leave) to recharge.

ManyNameChanges · 12/01/2023 18:45

It’s normal to help your parents.
It’s not normal to do so at the total expense of your wife and child.
Its nit normal to ALWAYS put your parents first before your marriage and your own family.

Fraaahnces · 12/01/2023 18:46

I would absolutely ensure that he and the in-laws have no time with baby alone. It sounds like they are trying to force legal precedence as though he is planning divorce anyway. Don’t let that happen. Keep breastfeeding as long as possible for now. Get as much of your financial information as possible (credit card info, bills, loans, mortgage, etc… and get to a solicitor.)

Nothingbuttheglory · 12/01/2023 18:48

Sounds like his mum's cancer is an excuse for him to treat you like shit. I suspect that in, say, a year's time, your anxiety and depression will be much better.

Cherryblossoms85 · 12/01/2023 18:49

He's a crazy arsehole. It doesn't really seem like he has a relationship with you at all, more like you're chattels. In the bin!!

jannier · 12/01/2023 18:54

He's hiding his controlling behaviour behind his mother's illness....sounds like he's learned it from his dad.

3peassuit · 12/01/2023 18:55

He can move back in with his mum and care for her full time. It sounds like he’s a selfish waste of space when he’s with his wife and baby.

EllieM27 · 12/01/2023 18:56

Is there also a cultural difference here? It sounds like there might be, both with his family dynamics and him insisting it’s normal. If so, don’t let him use that to gaslight you.

Stay the course and get rid of him. He’s awful.

SageMist · 12/01/2023 19:00

I think you have been a saint to stay this long.

Honestly this is never going to get better, when she dies your DH will then prioritise his father.

CousinKrispy · 12/01/2023 19:02

Not normal or acceptable. Ignore him when he says it is--he is talking bullshit, even though he might believe it.

Well done you on taking steps to leave. Please also look into counselling or other support to help you see through his unreasonableness. Women's Aid is worth calling. Does your work have an employee assistance program?

Cherryblossoms85 · 12/01/2023 19:03

I think he will become very, very nasty when you ask for divorce, make sure you have everything you need.

noooope · 12/01/2023 19:09

Reading this has given me anxiety. Well done for noticing your marriage isn't normal and your life shouldn't be this hard.

OverTheRubicon · 12/01/2023 19:10

That's awful. Sounds like his dad is horrible and he's learned. Yes, it's sad for his mum but also tragic for your dd to have her whole life overshadowed by this, leaving her mother suicidal and unsupported.
Like a pp, I wonder if this is also being culturally driven to some extent? My family is from overseas and this is a very familiar dynamic, DIL becoming a servant/slave to her husbands family (and having to separate from her own family).
What do your family say? If you were my daughter I'd be thrilled to help you separate, they might be strong allies for you.

Bookkeys · 12/01/2023 19:12

You deserve better than this

Summerlark · 12/01/2023 19:15

The problem is that he has never put you before his parents. I have sons. I absolutely expect them to put any eventual spouses before me and will tell them so. Your husband has neglected you shamefully for six years and she could go on for years. He didn't want your parents in the house but it was fine for his incontinent mother and boorish father to stay. He works three days a week and you do all the housework?

You'd be be mad to waste any more time with your selfish prat of a husband and his awful family. Your parents sound supportive. I'd confess all to them, see a solicitor and move out. Do not make the divorce easy - make sure you get every bit of money you are entitled to. In the nicest possible way you sound a bit like a doormat and you should never accept less just because your husband kicks off when the lawyer starts mentioning his pension. The settlement can affect the rest of your financial future so make sure you protect yourself and your child.

FontSnob · 12/01/2023 19:15

Leave him, as soon as you can. He sounds horrid.

wonderwhattodo · 12/01/2023 19:23

He hasn’t separated properly from his parents to instead become a unit with you and then you & your child

Saturdaynoon · 12/01/2023 19:25

He is not normal, and you do not need to tolerate this. I would look at getting a counsellor as well.as a lawyer.